Kim2022c

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Kim2022c
BibType INCOLLECTION
Key Kim2022c
Author(s) Younhee Kim, Andrew P. Carlin
Title Story Appreciation in Conversations-For-Learning: Stories and Gestalt-Contextures
Editor(s) Anna Filipi, Binh Thanh Ta, Maryanne Theobald
Tag(s) EMCA, Storytelling
Publisher Springer
Year 2022
Language English
City Singapore
Month
Journal
Volume
Number
Pages 201-223
URL Link
DOI 10.1007/978-981-16-9955-9_11
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title Storytelling Practices in Home and Educational Contexts: Perspectives from Conversation Analysis
Chapter

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Abstract

This chapter recommends a gestalt-contexture approach to stories in conversation. The gestalt-contexture approach advocates for a more holistic view of context, through analyses that account for both sequential and membership categorisation aspects of stories in interactions. This approach is sensitive to aspects of storytelling sequences (e.g. story prefaces, story appreciations, story completions, second stories) according to the contexts of their production, such as conversation-for-learning, in which participants’ interactional competence is more variable. The chapter examines longitudinal conversation data between two adolescent Korean boys and an American graduate student who was meeting them to help them practise their English. The open-ended nature of the conversation-for-learning made finding and launching a mutually orientable topic a constant and mandatory task for the participants. Whilst preliminary analyses identified “crazy things we did as a kid” as a prevalent theme in stories, the relevance of stories to this theme is not always self-evident but takes interactional work to establish. The study demonstrates (1) orientation to membership categorisation is sequentially operative in generating topics in conversation; (2) story appreciation points are collaboratively produced by tellers and recipients; (3) story appreciations are ongoing, permeable, and not limited to story completion.

Notes